5

On a rails app, I need to parse uris

a = 'some file name.txt'
URI(URI.encode(a)) # works

b = 'some filename with :colon in it.txt'
URI(URI.encode(b)) # fails URI::InvalidURIError: bad URI(is not URI?): 

How can I safely pass a file name to URI that contains special characters? Why doesn't encode work on colon?

5 Answers 5

12

URI.escape (or encode) takes an optional second parameter. It's a Regexp matching all symbols that should be escaped. To escape all non-word characters you could use:

URI.encode('some filename with :colon in it.txt', /\W/)
#=> "some%20filename%20with%20%3Acolon%20in%20it%2Etxt"

There are two predefined regular expressions for encode:

URI::PATTERN::UNRESERVED  #=> "\\-_.!~*'()a-zA-Z\\d"
URI::PATTERN::RESERVED    #=> ";/?:@&=+$,\\[\\]"
1
2
require 'uri'

url = "file1:abc.txt"
p URI.encode_www_form_component url

--output:--
"file1%3Aabc.txt"


p URI(URI.encode_www_form_component url)

--output:--
#<URI::Generic:0x000001008abf28 URL:file1%3Aabc.txt>


p URI(URI.encode url, ":")

--output:--
#<URI::Generic:0x000001008abcd0 URL:file1%3Aabc.txt>

Why doesn't encode work on colon?

Because encode/escape is broken.

1

Use Addressable::URI::encode

require "addressable/uri"

a = 'some file name.txt'
Addressable::URI.encode(Addressable::URI.encode(a))
# => "some%2520file%2520name.txt"

b = 'some filename with :colon in it.txt'
Addressable::URI.encode(Addressable::URI.encode(b)) 
# => "some%2520filename%2520with%2520:colon%2520in%2520it.txt"
2
  • %2520 is a double encoding. %20 is the encoding for a space. Then if you encode the string "%20", the encoding for a "%" sign is %25, giving you "%25" + "20" or "%2520". You don't want to double encode strings. Also you need to: gem install addressable. But also note that the colon was not encoded in the output.
    – 7stud
    Aug 21, 2013 at 23:32
  • @7stud You are right.. But this gem is URI s replacement currently..And I just tried to show OP what was not being achievable by URI can be done using this Addressable... :) Aug 22, 2013 at 5:20
0

The problem seems to be the empty space preceding the colon, 'lol :lol.txt' don't work, but 'lol:lol.txt' works.
Maybe you could replace the spaces for something else.

-1

If you want to escape special character from the given string. It is best to use

esc_uri=URI.escape("String with special character")

The result string is URI escaped string and safe to pass it to URI. Refer URI::Escape for how to use URI escape. Hope this helps.

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